Throughout the past ten years, God has granted the ministry staff of Anchor Your Life many new and exciting opportunities to share His Word with people around the world. In May 2005, we used the blog format during my trip to Israel, establishing our first “travel-blog.â€Â Thousands of people logged on to hear my reflections on the different sites we visited, to listen to short Bible studies, and to view posted pictures. However, our intent was more than just to share travel information. The greater purpose was to draw people deeper into the Word through what they saw and heard. The response to the “travel-blog,†as well as to the live presentations, has been overwhelmingly positive. But, more importantly, God has used it as a means to cause increasing numbers of people to study the Bible more intently, which has also been the case in my own life. After seeing the rugged and varied terrain, noticing the incredibly adaptable and diverse vegetation, traveling the long distances between sites (covered on foot in Biblical times!), and standing in the very places where Jesus lived and taught, I have not read the Word in the same way since. What I saw, experienced, and learned in Israel has clearly enhanced my study and my understanding of Scripture.
Blog
"Things I Wish The Bible Didn't Say"
Ultimately, of course, we have to accept God’s word in full, not just the parts we like, so I asked God to tell me what He meant by Romans 8:17. I confessed to Him that I’m not so sure I have the courage it takes to take the bitter with the sweet, the suffering with the glory. Then one morning, at the instant I woke, I was, for several minutes, overwhelmed with a sense of profound sorrow for the world. I felt deeply grieved for all the souls who were scattered and lost forever. For that brief time, I think the Lord allowed me to understand, in a very small way, that if we have the mind of Christ, then we have the heart of Christ. The things that break God’s heart should break our hearts also. We should be sharing in Christ’s suffering and sorrow for the world to be able to love and serve Him and partake in the work He has planned for us to do. May God give each of us this sense of His grief and suffering for the lost that He loves so much. Read the full devotion.
What are some of the things that you see around you that would break God’s heart? Share with us how you handle them.
Poems That Don't Rhyme
Some time ago my wife and I were close to a couple who were struck with a tragedy. They had two teen-age daughters, both Christians and going on for the Lord filled with the promise of fulfilled lives of service. They were both killed in an automobile accident. You can understand the sorrow of the parents and all who knew these two young girls. It seemed so unexplainable. Why? It just didn’t make sense for these two young lives to be snuffed out. As I thought about that I put down my thoughts into words. I am no poet but, what came out was the thought of poems that don’t rhyme, events that were beyond our comprehension. Read the poem at Poems That Don’t Rhyme
Share your comments below about how life has made sense in hindsight
The Look of Love
This is the forth of 8 devotions from Luke 15:11-32. Today’s devotion is from Luke 15:20.
Listen to The Look of Love
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A Distant Land
This is the second of 8 devotions from Luke 15:11-32. Today’s devotion is from Luke 15:14-16.
Listen to A Distant Land
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A Wounded Heart
The first of 8 devotions from Luke 15:11-32. Today’s devotion is from Luke 15:11-13.
Listen to A Wounded Heart
Life as an Alien
Since you call on a Father who judges each man’s work impartially, live your lives as strangers here in reverent fear. (NIV) 1 Peter 1:17
Christians are called to a lifestyle that is different from the rest of the world. Peter reminds his readers who are Christians, that God is the Judge as well as their Father, and that He is impartial in judgment. He urges them to live their lives as “strangers” or “aliens” or “foreigners.” In New Testament times, most of the inhabitants of the Roman world were not citizens. These people were legally classed as aliens. Although the aliens were subjects of Rome and burdened with heavy taxes, they were without rights under Roman law. Instead, these people were subject to the laws of their own country. As a result, the resident alien had no right to claim protection in local Roman courts. Although they had not rights, Rome could command their duty. Because of this, resident aliens often banded together to form smaller communities. These alien communities operated under the laws of their homeland.
Jesus referred to our Christian “alien” status in John 17 when He said, “I have given them your word and the world has hated them, for they are not of the world any more than I am of the world. My prayer is not that you take them out of the world but that you protect them from the evil one. 16 They are not of the world, even as I am not of it.” (John 17:14-16)
As aliens in this present world, Christians are vulnerable. We are without a basis to claim rights under an ungodly society. In turn the church is similar to those small alien communities where we can be God’s “community” in man’s world. As strangers here we have unique “laws” to follow of our heavenly homeland that differ from the world.
How do you feel like a stranger or alien here? Are you ostracized by your neighbors? Criticized for following the Bible with raising your children? Are you shunned in the social arena because you refuse to participate in some of the activities? Do you feel out of step with the rest of the world? If so, great! We are not meant to fit in here. As a matter of fact if you pursue living a godly life you will often find that you are living exactly opposite of the world! And that’s how Jesus lived.
Want to be like Christ? Live as a stranger to this world. . .live according to His Heavenly standards. Ponder some of His closing comments before He died on the cross:
“If the world hates you, keep in mind that it hated me first. If you belonged to the world, it would love you as its own. As it is, you do not belong to the world, but I have chosen you out of the world. That is why the world hates you. (NIV) John 15:18-19
Be holy, because I am holy
As obedient children, do not conform to the evil desires you had when you lived in ignorance. But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for it is written: “Be holy, because I am holy.” (NIV) 1 Peter 1:14-16
1 Peter was written to encourage Christians. In typical Peter fashion, he is clear and specific with his instructions to his readers. Ok, are you ready for this? He writes, “But just as he who called you is holy, so be holy in all you do; for it is written: “Be holy, because I am holy.” (1 Peter 1:15-16). Wow! “In all you do”. . .not most of the time. . .not just when others are watching. . .not just in church. . .in all things, at all times!
God is first described as the One who “called” you. It is the One who chose you before the foundations of the earth who is described as “holy”. Those called to be God’s children are to be like him! The basic idea of holiness in the Bible is that of separation from all that is profane. Holiness embraces purity and moral integrity. For a Christian the essence of holiness is a dynamic expression of divine being lived out within the normal processes of daily life. It is as God’s obedient children, living by his will, that we fulfill the call to holiness.
What comes to your mind when you think about holiness? How would you define holiness? Or what does holiness look like in a Christian? Do you know anyone who strives to live a holy life. . . and does a good job at it? Share some of your thoughts with us.